娇色导航

Beth Stackpole
Contributing writer

Business leaders take aim at the 娇色导航role

Feature
Jan 24, 202210 mins

As the top technology spot becomes more strategic, tech-savvy business leaders are stepping into the ring, giving traditional IT up-and-comers a run for the 娇色导航role.

leadership execs superimposed on building
Credit: Getty Images

In his 30-plus-year career, Richard Wiedenbeck has run the bases on business roles. He鈥檚 been a program manager, headed up business development, served as the president of a project consulting company, and even earned a near six-figure salary as a professional magician. It鈥檚 only been in the past decade or so that he鈥檚 capped off his resume with a turn as a prominent CIO.

Wiedenbeck, currently senior vice president (SVP) and chief technology and transformation officer at Ameritas, says all those years spent in business and consulting roles gave him a different perspective and leg up over traditional IT leaders, especially now that technology is so intertwined with business strategy. 鈥淢y teeth were cut in the roles and initiatives for why you look to technology,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou put technology to work to solve business problems or create opportunities, and I spent a lot of time in that space.鈥

The CIO, and more recently CTO roles, have steadily gained prominence these past few years as technology has emerged as the key enabler of digital strategy, becoming, in many cases, the epicenter of modern business. With the pandemic accelerating digital transformation along with a shift to hybrid and remote work, the 娇色导航profile has soared even higher, crystalizing the need for today鈥檚 IT leaders to be ambidextrous 鈥 as comfortable plotting a technology roadmap as they are discussing strategy in the boardroom.

According to the 2022 State of the CIO, 86% of respondents see the 娇色导航role as more digital and innovation focused with 84% characterizing the 娇色导航as a critical changemaker, taking the lead on business and technology transformation. Seventy-nine percent of respondents expect the 娇色导航to maintain a strong educational partnership with the CEO and board of directors.

This years-in-the-making transformation of 娇色导航from back-office manager and order taker to strategic business leader has finally caught the attention of some on the business side. With technology in the spotlight and the 娇色导航position calling for their brand of business savvy and leadership skills, the 娇色导航track is suddenly a viable path for executives outside of traditional fast-track IT circles.

research shows the percentage of CIOs hailing from non-IT backgrounds more than tripled between 2015 and 2018, with a little over a quarter of IT leaders hitting the job without the customary years of in-the-trenches IT experience. In fact, those with backgrounds in digital product development and digital innovation, executives with P&L experience, and even heads of software companies are starting to encroach on 娇色导航territory, escalating competition for influential IT leadership jobs, according to Martha Heller, CEO of Heller Search Associates, a recruiting firm specializing in 娇色导航and IT leadership.

鈥淭he 娇色导航role used to be defined as an operational position that would focus on efficiency and keeping the business running faster, cheaper, better, and safer,鈥 Heller says. 鈥淣ow, technology leadership isn鈥檛 about running the business; it鈥檚 about changing the business and finding new opportunity.鈥

Richard Wiedenbeck, senior vice president (SVP) and chief technology and transformation officer, Ameritas

Ameritas

While the shift has opened the appeal of the position to a much wider potential executive audience, Heller contends that a non-techie technology leader only makes sense if the company has already made investments in a modern IT architecture and gone full throttle with digital-enabled business. 鈥淭hese candidates, especially those with P&L experience, may be more strategic and better able to speak finance, the language of the boardroom,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut that鈥檚 all predicated on a company having an agile, modern architecture. If you鈥檝e got a massive investment in legacy IT, you can鈥檛 have a 娇色导航that doesn鈥檛 have an enterprise IT background.鈥

The language of business

For Wiedenbeck, serving in key roles at companies such as Boeing, Northrop Grumman, and RR Donnelley, where he actively leveraged technology to advance key business outcomes, gave him an advantage well before such criteria was a must for aspiring CIOs. In his early days of IT leadership, Wiedenbeck says he had credibility coming right in the door, unlike many of his 娇色导航counterparts who have to work hard to continuously prove their business mettle.

鈥淭echnology has to care as much about business outcomes as the business does, and [my background] gave me that lens and ability to speak their language,鈥 he says, adding that early feedback from his business counterparts was that he knew what it took to sell to customers or own responsibility for P&L. 鈥淭hey were willing to listen more,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey respected me because I understood their world; I wasn鈥檛 just pitching their world.鈥

Vince Kellen, CIO, University of California, San Diego

University of California, San Diego

Vince Kellen, now 娇色导航of the University of California, San Diego, maintains that his early embrace of now popular IT strategies, such as agile practices, and his fiscal awareness honed through years spent in accounting and marketing gave him an edge for IT leadership roles. Kellen, who began his career on the business side in various accounting and general management posts, had an organic interest in technology, which he cultivated over the years through bootcamps and university programs, including earning a degree in computer science. What started as a hobby doing computer stuff on the side morphed into formal business roles where he continually gravitated to technology-oriented assignments. 鈥淣o matter where I went, everyone brought me technology problems and I solved them,鈥 he says.

Because he was on the finance side, Kellen was always trying to leverage technology as a means to an end 鈥 identifying problems where technology could make a difference and orchestrating development of a minimally viable solution out of necessity and practicality. 鈥淚 cut nickels in half so I don鈥檛 have to ask my boss for money to help IT,鈥 he says now of his 娇色导航philosophy. 鈥淚 say, 鈥楬ere鈥檚 this opportunity, here鈥檚 the potential for financial gain, and here鈥檚 how we are going to get it done on practically nothing,鈥欌 he explains. 鈥淚 know how to accomplish all major objectives at a fraction of the cost of my peers because I have business sensitivity.鈥

What Kellen and other business-traveled IT leaders also have is an innate ability to speak the language of business 鈥 a requirement that remains a challenge for many of today鈥檚 CIOs. That鈥檚 certainly where Mary Glide, currently vice president of technology at Sequoia Capital, believes she has the upper hand. Glide, who studied accounting in college and started out as an auditor, also found herself drawn to technology, taking on tasks such as setting up networks and CRM systems in her early days and eventually teaching herself how to code. A few years into her accounting career, Glide realized she wanted more formal IT responsibilities. Eventually, her search led her to Sequoia, which at the time, needed someone who could split their time between finance, IT, and marketing 鈥 a job scenario that fit perfectly with her aspirations.

Mary Glide, vice president of technology, Sequoia Capital

Sequoia Capital

After three years in the split role, Glide spent another 16 years at Sequoia focused on various aspects of technology and has never looked back. Her current role involves managing all the company鈥檚 global workspace technologies and global infrastructure, but Glide also keeps her hand in software development. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 stop building things, but I鈥檓 not doing software engineering work anymore,鈥 she adds.

Glide says her early work on the business side provided a foundation for communicating effectively with her LOB counterparts, including helping them understand problems and developing a business case for technology when and where it makes sense. 鈥淎 lot of times, I can find a more creative solution rather than solving that one need,鈥 she explains. 鈥淎 solution can be too technology-focused, and people don鈥檛 step back and see that a process change is called for, not a technology change.鈥

Honing a competitive edge

IT executives hoping to stand apart from business leaders pivoting to technology leadership need to keep focused on what they should have been doing all along: furthering their technology expertise while immersing in the business. CIOs who have successfully crossed over from business make the following suggestions:

Get an MBA. Going back to school isn鈥檛 for everyone, but you can accomplish much of the same goal through a so-called 鈥渟treet MBA,鈥 accomplished by picking up projects, volunteering for co-sponsorship, even doing several 鈥渢ours of duty鈥 in various parts of the business such as business development, manufacturing, even supply chain to get a real-world grasp on how operations work. 鈥淟ean into the business every chance you can and pick up work,鈥 advises Ameritas鈥 Wiedenbeck.

Martha Heller, CEO, Heller Search Associates

Heller Search Associates

Be a value creator. For too long, CIOs have viewed their role through the prism of cost savings, not value creation. That鈥檚 not going to fly in the digital world and it鈥檚 certainly not going to deliver any advantage when and if you come up against tech-inclined business leaders. CIOs should operate from the vantage point of an internal consultant, constantly looking across every aspect of the business and staying abreast of what鈥檚 going on in the technology world to drive growth. 鈥淵ou need to always be looking for opportunities because that鈥檚 how you wind up being sought after for that new chief digital officer role or any new 娇色导航job,鈥 Heller says.

Embrace modern IT constructs. Transforming IT architecture through embrace of cloud, microservices, APIs, and agile development is not only a jump starter for digital business; it鈥檚 a key enabler for IT leadership and career growth. 鈥淵ou need to create a flexible, adaptable architecture that allows you and your organization to get out of the operational weeds,鈥 Heller contends. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e saddled by a project pipeline and getting reports to everyone that needs them, you鈥檒l never be free to be transformative.鈥

Polish those communication skills. CIOs need to get as good at the so-called 鈥渆levator pitch鈥 as their business counterparts. That means being able to articulate technology in terms that resonate with the business and that are simple to understand. 鈥淐EOs have so much on their mind, they don鈥檛 want an education in technology,鈥 Wiedenbeck says. 鈥淲hat they want is to understand in business terms how that technology direction makes good business sense. Don鈥檛 discount the value of a good PowerPoint.鈥

At the same time, don鈥檛 discount the value of a solid technology foundation 鈥 something business leaders must develop if they want a hand in leading transformative digital business.

鈥淵ou have to get away from the core of technology into the core of business without leaving the core of technology behind,鈥 Kellen advises. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 invaluable to the CIO, and those without a core understanding of technology will feel hampered.鈥

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